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Members' Opening Reception for "Boundless: A California Invitational" and "Animals Among Us: 11th Annual Youth Exhibition."
14 October 2016
Photos by Stacy Keck
Holi is an Indian festival that is well-known for its boundless fun and joy among Indians and has gained popularity among tourists all over the world. During the Holi season, tourists from all over the world come to various parts of India to experience the high of this sparkling celebration.
Source: cockcolours.blogspot.com/2022/12/buy-holi-colours-and-hol...
Built Jan 10, 2010 for children ages 5 and up located behind the Community Center in the family housing area. Coordination between EFMP and Balfour Beatty Housing resulted in Balfour Beatty providing the funding and construction of our first Boundless Playground.
This illustration is from a retelling of Norse mythology in the 1930 edition of Annie Keary's The Heroes of Asgard (1857) illustrated by Charles E. Brock. The book is divided into nine stories beginning with the Creation Myth and ending with Ragnarök. The stories are further divided into parts which have illustrated headers and illustrated capital letters. This header illustration in Story VI: "The Wanderings of Freya" for Part II: “Loki - The Iron Wood - A Boundless Waste“ depicts Loki whispering evil thoughts into Freyja's ear as she sleeps. Freyja is on a journey to look for her husband, Oðr, who has gone missing while she was out looking for finery to wear to a feast.
Editor's Note: The third edition of The Heroes of Asgard was published in 1930 as The Heroes of Asgard: Tales from Scandinavian Mythology and was illustrated by Charles E. Brock (1870 – 1938). This is the edition that most readers are familiar with today. The Brock edition contains eighty-five illustrations with sixteen colour plates. The text of the tales remained the same, but the scholarly introduction and the notes of the second edition were eliminated. The Brock edition was republished in 2012, by Dover Publications as Tales of the Norse Warrior Gods: The Heroes of Asgard, but not all of the plates are in colour and several were relocated, i,e., to the front cover and inside the covers. Unfortunately, without the framing conversations from the first edition or the academic apparatus from the second edition, naive readers of the third edition sometimes believe that the retellings represent the cultural and religious beliefs of Old Norse pagans. (Baer, Trish. “A Brief Overview of the Editions of The Heroes of Asgard” The Heroes of Asgard (1930) ).
The MyNDIR site features illustrations from manuscripts and early print books that are not on our Flickr page and can be viewed on MyNDIR: myndir.uvic.ca/. The Flickr page is part of the SSHRC IDG project to add illustrations to the repository from Victorian and Edwardian retellings of Old Norse myths and sagas.
Brock, C. E.. Header for "Loki - The Iron Wood - A Boundless Waste". From: Keary, Annie, and Eliza Keary. The Heroes of Asgard: Tales from Scandinavian Mythology. London: Macmillan and Co. Limited, 1930. 115. MyNDIR: My Norse Digital Image Repository. Ed. P. A. Baer. 2024. Edition 2.6. Victoria, B. C.: Humanities Computing and Media Centre, University of Victoria. 2024.
Shemspeed Hip Hop Fest at Le Poisson Rouge
CD Release Party for "A Tribe Called Tes", Single release party for Y-Love's "Move On"
with Live performances by
Tes Uno, Ted King & guest Geng Grizlee, Y-Love & Diwon, Night, Kosha Dillz, DeScribe, Meyhem Lauren, J. Stone, Kyle Rapps & special guests.
158 Bleecker Street, NYC www.lepoissonrouge.com
* co-sponsored by Artists 4 Israel & Boundless New York
The last minimalist shot that round up my recent Tanjung Langsat trip. Initially I wanted to capture a close-up of this fisherman placing the crab trap on his small boat, but then I realise that even my longest focal length 200mm is not enough. So I came out with this one.
I think I had broken several rules in this one: Everything i.e. the fisherman boat, the horizon is in the middle rather than following the rule of third; The whole frame is over exposed with much lesser details; I left plenty of blank portion in the frame and etc.
However, I feel the result turned out to be quite acceptable. Guess this is so called: Art is Boundless ~
Just as Pavlov trained dogs to associate the sound of a bell with food, which consequentially caused them to salivate although no food was present, yoga wisdom reveals that we have been trained to accept a certain type of experience as happiness, although the substance is missing.
That experience is the contact between our senses - eyes, ears, nose, tongue and skin - and what those senses perceive as favourable objects - attractive forms, pleasing sounds, sweet smells, delicious tastes and soft touches.
This is called “conditional happiness,” not just because it’s learned, but also because it depends on certain conditions, which are largely or completely out of our control.
Some of those conditions are our age, family and place of birth, the weather, how much money and health we have, the people around us, and the time and place we live in.
Therefore what we call “life” is the attempt to control our circumstances - our conditions - so that our senses connect with sense objects that they find agreeable because, we believe, this equals “happiness.”
But even if we can arrange favourable conditions for this version of happiness, they quickly change into unfavourable; pleasing sense objects are replaced by the repulsive, and our happiness transforms into distress.
This is the world of conditioned or external happiness.
Fortunately, although unknown to most, there is another world - the internal world - where happiness exists beyond conditions.
And just as there have been great explorers of the external world and its presentation of happiness, there have also been “internal explorers” who dedicated just as much effort to pursuing the pleasures of the inner.
Such rare beings want unconditional happiness, that which is not affected by time and change.
They want to actually arrive at happiness and stay there, rather than simply struggle toward it.
That path of pure happiness, Bhakti yoga, is for the genuine pleasure lover, that rare soul who wont settle for anything less than the best.
- Inspired by Bhagavad Gita 6.20-23
"In the stage of perfection called trance, or samādhi, one’s mind is completely restrained from material mental activities by practice of yoga. This perfection is characterized by one’s ability to see the Self by the pure mind and to relish and rejoice in the Self. In that joyous state, one is situated in boundless transcendental happiness, realized through transcendental senses. Established thus, one never departs from the truth, and upon gaining this he thinks there is no greater gain. Being situated in such a position, one is never shaken, even in the midst of greatest difficulty. This indeed is actual freedom from all miseries arising from material contact."
Model: 小島
Photographer: Edwin Setiawan
Place: 竹子湖
Date: 2011/04/02
Just about Photography: edwinsetiawan.wordpress.com/
Edwin Setiawan Photography: www.edwinsetiawan.com/